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Chapter 315, talk on paper

In the absence of masters, only rookies are left pecking each other.

Since Dina asked sincerely, Iger naturally answered openly.

First, Egg asked Dina about the action plan formulated by the previous general.

After Dina said "wait a minute", after a while, Iger's phone rang. He opened it and saw that Dina had sent him several files. Iger opened the files with his fingers and loaded them for a long time.

Yes, and then there is an extremely detailed military map.

Iger was shocked. Sister, she actually released this thing. She must have leaked the secret!

"It doesn't matter." Dina said to Egger: "I turned on level IV confidentiality. Now only the general has the authority to monitor the content of my calls, but he is still lying down.

Besides, these so-called military secrets are actually worthless. Humanity is about to disappear, and we don’t know who we are protecting if we keep them secret.”

Well, Dina has said so, and Egger doesn't care anymore. Dina is right, this kind of map is actually worthless. If Dina hadn't begged him to look at it, Egger wouldn't have bothered to look at it.

After Iger opened the map, the screen of his mobile phone was too small to operate. He simply walked into the entertainment room, turned off the entertainment movie that was playing, and then plugged his mobile phone into Nicholas' computer host.

A group of muscular men were watching a movie in broad daylight to quench their hunger and thirst. When they saw Father Egger rushing in without saying a word, they were so frightened that they all pulled up their pants and ran away.

Although Iger is not a disciplinary committee member, his priest costume is indeed very lethal.

Even if Father Egger doesn't pursue everyone's high spirits, there is still Sister Alison who follows him closely.

Iger plugged his phone into the computer and clicked on the connection. Then he carefully looked at the military map and information sent by Dina through the computer screen.

While Egger was reading the information, his mind was spinning rapidly, and he chatted with Dina from time to time. After a few minutes, Egger roughly understood the military's current problems.

The military now faces three dilemmas: expansion, persistence, and contraction.

In fact, the core problem of solving these three difficult choices is the same, which is that in the face of the absolute numerical advantage of the infected, the military's continuous war losses have reached an unsustainable level.

Egger took the mouse and turned over the map with the contour lines. These three plans were all very good and each had its merits. However, the current situation has completely changed, so adjustments must be made.

After thinking for a while, Egger said to Dina: "I think the general's bait plan and your contraction plan can be used together.

First of all, even if the blood plague heart evolves into the blood plague brain, it cannot create hundreds of thousands or millions of infected people out of thin air.

Infected people can only migrate on foot from uninhabited red zones. Even if the future wave of infected people is unstoppable, it will take time to form a wave of infected people.

Therefore, you can try to eliminate the infected people as much as possible before the wave of infected people comes, and reduce their number.

In the final analysis, the war between humans and the infected can only end with the total annihilation of one party. Therefore, killing as many infected people as possible is the only choice for every survivor.

Second, what I think is very good about the bait plan is that it tries to destroy the blood plague heart occupying the bank building. This blood plague heart is too huge, much bigger than the ones I have seen before.

If there are many, using fire attack is a good method, you can try it.

What I said may be a bit cruel. When the general formulated the decoy plan, he may have only left time for those assault teams to enter."

When Egger said this, Dina fell silent.

During the meeting a few days ago, Dina felt that this plan was a little awkward to understand. When Iger mentioned it, she suddenly understood where the awkwardness came from.

No matter how the bait plan attracts infected people, there can only be an extremely narrow gap in such a large city.

Once the commandos enter the red zone, they will be rounded up by the infected sent by the Blood Plague Heart, and they have no room to evacuate.

Dina thought that when the general made the plan that day, none of the other staff members put forward any opinions or suggestions in this regard. Could it be that they didn't know about it and didn't see it? Definitely not.

Thinking of this, Dina suddenly became a little scared. She felt that she couldn't make such a decision, even if it was rationally speaking, it was right.

Dina is a girl with a very contradictory personality. On the one hand, she has been eager to release her nature since she was a child. On the other hand, she is extremely soft-hearted and is afraid that she will hurt others.

This is actually not a contradiction.

Even though she is emotionally indifferent, Dina does not think that people of the same kind can die at will.

Since she has been able to see death since she was a child, Dina has a deeper understanding of death than most people.

Dina kills infected people quickly and accurately because she does not regard infected people as her own kind, but she has never killed a human being.

In this regard, Dina is not as good as Egger.

After all, there are still a minority of natural-born killers, and the vast majority of people become more and more sophisticated as their experience increases.

Egger did not pay attention to it, nor did he take into account Dina's psychological feelings. He preached matter-of-factly: "I think the success probability of executing the bait plan is about 20%. 30% of the failure points are that the commando cannot enter the vicinity of the bank building.

50% of the failure points are that after successfully executing the plan, the heart of the blood plague cannot be completely destroyed or truly destroyed.

I watched the drone videos and photos, and I think the underground space may have been filled with blood plague hearts.

If the space is too full, it will hinder combustion. No matter how big the fire is, it will not be able to burn in.

Actually, I have a better suggestion, of course, you just need to listen to it first.

You know 91i, right?

You also have planes...

Anyway, that’s all. Although the cost of using aircraft is high, based on comprehensive estimates, I think that compared to your bait plan, both the success rate and the overall loss are better."

When Dina heard this, she was shocked again.

After living with Ige for nearly a month, Dina only saw the honest and friendly side of Ige. Now she was shocked to discover that this boy might actually be as good as the general in doing things.

Egg's thoughts opened up as he spoke, and he said to Dina: "This is the first step, the attack plan.

The successful implementation of this plan can, on the one hand, significantly reduce the number of infected people, and on the other hand, it can boost morale and make everyone less resistant to the subsequent defense contraction."

It is inevitable that the defense line will shrink. If we continue to hold on like this, if another wave of infected people comes from other places, it will really cause the entire line to collapse.

Egger continued: "But your retreat must not cause everyone to run away in one breath.

Make use of positions and terrain to fight and retreat at the same time, make full use of space for results, and kill the infected properly. Anyway, you have a lot of supplies, take out what you can use, and don't be too frugal."

Dina nodded seriously while listening. She now fully believed in Egger's plan (a lie).

Egger said seriously to Dina: "The third point, and the most important point, is not to stick to it.

There is a saying: save the land and lose the people, both the people and the land will be lost; save the people and lose the land, the people and the land will survive.

As long as there are people, the fire will be there. In a land as big as America, there is enough space to avoid the infected, so don't fight them.

Actually, I have a big plan, but I can't implement it on my own. Let me tell you first.

The population of America is distributed in the east, west, south, and north, with less in the middle. Calculated, the number of infected people in the entire continent is less than 400 million. These infected people are crowded together, and it is not said that they must be like a sea.

But if we pursue them all the way to the middle, and we adopt the strategy of trading space for density, the density of infected people will inevitably decrease.

If their density does not decrease, their hunting range will shrink. Anyway, in the vast land of America, we have enough strategic depth to compete with them.

However, we are not just trying to escape, this is a larger decoy plan.

Most of the survivors sneaked the infected back and forth in the central area, while some other survivors went to raid the empty Heart of Blood Plague in the rear.

As long as you continue to destroy the heart of the blood plague, the brain of the blood plague will become increasingly sluggish and eventually collapse."

When Egger said this, stars almost flashed in Dina's eyes.

She had been anxious all morning, but she didn't expect that after Iger said a few words, everything would fall into place.

"You are so awesome!" Dina said to Egg with some admiration.

"But there is a problem." Egger said to Dina: "There is a condition here that must be unified deployment and unified command. Both are indispensable."

Later, Egger explained to Dina that unified deployment, as the name suggests, survivors cannot be clustered together. Each survivor team must stick to their own area of ​​responsibility.

Only survivors who insist on spreading out can reduce the density of the infected population.

Of course, the situation faced by each area of ​​responsibility may be different. Some survivors may have their area of ​​responsibility surrounded by a wave of infected people and the team will be wiped out.

At this time, the survivor team must maintain a strong sense of responsibility. Even if they die, they must die on their own land.

If the survivors are chased by the infected, they will rush to one place and flee, and that's it. The result will be that the infected from the east, west, south, and west surround all the survivors in a small space like making dumplings.

This is hard to say, and even harder to actually do.

After all, everyone has brains and legs. You can't nail the survivors to a certain position.

When it comes to unified command, it is also very difficult.

Now speaking, the difficulty of unified command does not lie in the communication tools. Whether it is gospel broadcasting or the current military satellite network, unified command can be achieved.

However, the difficulty is how to get those people to obey the command uniformly.

If unified deployment only involves escape, unified command involves attacking difficulties.

Everyone who is selected to participate in the attack will probably have the same question in their mind: "Why me?"

People not only have brains and legs, they also have selfish minds.

If every survivor was a person with a fearless spirit, the infected would have been killed long ago, right? lv2, lv3, lv4.

The vast majority of survivors only know how to escape and leave the monsters to others to kill, so the problem is getting more and more serious now.

Everyone wants to take advantage, and in the end everyone suffers.

Everyone is rushing to take advantage of the situation, and the result is that everyone gets an advantage.

This is a typical game theory. From ancient times to the present, humans have suffered enough losses in this area, but there is nothing they can do about it.

There is really no way. The reason why people are human is because of their diversity.

Speaking of which, infected people are completely opposite to humans. They are dull, single, wooden and stupid. However, under the control of the Blood Plague Brain, the strongest point of infected people is that they can achieve absolute unified deployment and unified command.

.

From this aspect, human beings who are as loose as sand really cannot defeat them.

Egger's narration made Dina sigh, and both of them felt that they were "sorrowful for their misfortune and angry for their inability to argue".

Sister Alison, who was standing quietly next to Egger, had her own thoughts in mind after hearing Egger's remarks.

Is it really difficult to unify deployment and unified command?

It depends on who it is for.

The believers of the Evangelical Church can absolutely achieve perfect unified deployment and unified command.

"I finally understand why only devout believers can be saved." Sister Alison thought silently, "The glory of the Lord protects me and illuminates the way forward."


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